Dirk Braeckman

Curator Eva Wittocx

13.05—26.11.2017

Dirk Braeckman will represent Flanders at the 57th Venice Biennale and will bring a solo show in the Belgian Pavilion curated by Eva Wittocx.

Dirk Braeckman’s work brings stillness to today’s influx of images and information. Working with analogue photography, he developed a visual language that reflects on the act of viewing and the status of the image. In the Belgian Pavilion he presents a series of new monumental photographic prints on baryta paper.

Dirk Braeckman’s work brings a sense of stillness and tranquillity to today’s constant tide of images. Working with analogue photography, towards the end of the 1980s, he found a visual language of his own that focuses on the act of viewing and reflects on the status of the image. The artist explores the boundaries of his medium and challenges photographic conventions. The camera’s flash reflects off the surface of the subject, the texture of walls, curtains, carpets and posters. His images show anonymous subjects from his immediate surroundings. Stripped of anecdote, the stories they suggest are entirely open. The artist shows empty rooms in which time appears to stand still, elements of interchangeable interiors or human figures that stand only for presence – separated from any specific identity, place, time or emotion. Braeckman’s photographic images combine intimacy and distance to create a private, secluded world whose meaning remains undefined.

Dirk Braeckman creates his images in the darkroom. Experiment is crucial to both their registration by the camera and their subsequent processing. The exposure, manipulation and development of negative and photographic paper consistently results in new and unique images. Graininess, spots, cropping and flattening of perspective resist an immediate reading or interpretation of his work. Over and underexposure and working in grey tones heighten the iconic character of his images.

The Belgian pavilion is presenting a series of monumental prints on baryta paper. The unique, analogue prints are made from negatives from Braeckman’s archive, with the artist sometimes creating multiple images from the same source. Although some works also use colour and were made digitally, the exhibition focuses on monumental work in grey tones, produced in Braeckman’s darkroom.

These artworks pose a challenge to today’s ubiquitous image consumption. They are recognizable, yet flirt with representation, abstraction and the reality of what is shown. Braeckman is not interested in photographic editions or in registering moments that document fragments of reality. He looks for open images with a special charge, which withhold as well as divulge information, giving them the power to hold the viewer’s gaze.